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The Great Britain Guide

Historic bridges · London

Hammersmith Flyover

Paid admission♿ Wheelchair accessible

Hammersmith Flyover is a historic bridge in the United Kingdom.

Under the Hammersmith Flyover - geograph.org.uk - 6145758

Glyn Baker — CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
15 min–30 min
Nearest railway station
Hammersmith (District and Piccadilly lines) · 0.1 km
  • Paid entry
  • Dog-friendly
  • Wheelchair accessible

About

Hammersmith Flyover is a named historic bridge in the United Kingdom. Coordinates: 51.4911°, -0.2240°. This entry is part of The Great Britain Guide, a free, ad-free, open-data tourist directory.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

The Hammersmith flyover is an elevated roadway in West London which carries the A4 arterial road over and to one side of the central Hammersmith gyratory system, and it links together the Cromwell Road extension (Talgarth Road) with the start of the Great West Road. It is one of the first examples of an elevated road using reinforced concrete.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

seen from under the flyover]] Completed in 1961, it was one of the first examples of its design. J&J Dean, a London-based civil engineering contractor, built the flyover at a cost of £1.2 million. The then Conservative Transport Minister Ernest Marples had been a Marples, Ridgway shareholder. To avoid a conflict of interest Marples undertook to sell his controlling shareholder interest in the company as soon as he became Minister of Transport in October 1959, although there was a purchaser's requirement that he buy back the shares after he ceased to hold office, at the price paid, should the purchaser so require. Much of the churchyard of St Paul's Church, the oldest parish church of…

Architecture

An elevated road employing reinforced concrete balanced cantilever beam supports with a single central column. The deck spine and wings are of hollow prestressed concrete design, with each span being tensioned by longitudinal tendons (four clusters, each of sixteen 29 mm steel cables). The flyover was designed by G. Maunsell & Partners, Consulting Engineers, led by Peter Wroth and is 622 m long. When built the flyover included heating cables to "eliminate ice formation". The system was initially successful, though a £4800 bill for the 1962–63 winter () "so shocked Hammersmith Borough Council that, as a protest, it cut off the electricity". London County Council paid the bill after this. The…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
51.4911, -0.2240
Parish
Hammersmith and Fulham, unparished area
Postcode
W6 9PE
Parliamentary constituency
Hammersmith and Chiswick
Nearest railway station
Hammersmith (District and Piccadilly lines)0.1 km
Opening
16 November 1961

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Hammersmith Flyover?
Hammersmith Flyover is in London, United Kingdom (postcode W6 9PE), in the parish of Hammersmith and Fulham, unparished area.
Who owns Hammersmith Flyover?
Hammersmith Flyover is owned by | maint = Transport for London.
How do I get to Hammersmith Flyover?
The nearest railway station is Hammersmith (District and Piccadilly lines), about 0.1 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode W6 9PE.